New MVA coming with Cabinet Shuffle
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Re: New MVA coming with Cabinet Shuffle
Conservatives, NDP call for investigation into alleged PMO interference in SNC-Lavalin case
By Charlie Pinkerton and Marieke Walsh. Published on Feb 8, 2019
By Charlie Pinkerton and Marieke Walsh. Published on Feb 8, 2019
The federal Conservatives are calling for several senior Trudeau staffers and cabinet ministers to appear before the House justice committee to respond to allegations that the Prime Minister’s Office pressured former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould to intervene in criminal proceedings against SNC-Lavalin.
Conservative Party Leader Andrew Scheer told reporters on Friday that MPs from his party, with the help of the NDP, will call an emergency meeting of the committee next week, where they’ll present a motion to hear from nine members of the Trudeau inner circle.
If passed, the committee would hear from Wilson-Raybould, new Attorney General David Lametti, Trudeau’s chief of staff, Katie Telford, Trudeau’s principal secretary Gerald Butts, Privy Council clerk Michael Wernick, director of public prosecutions Kathleen Roussel, senior PMO advisers Mathieu Bouchard and Elder Marques; and Wilson-Raybould’s chief of staff Jessica Prince. They would answer questions from MPs about allegations that were reported by the Globe and Mail on Thursday.
According to the Globe’s story, the Prime Minister’s Office urged Wilson-Raybould to intervene in a case of corruption against the Quebec engineering and construction company. The company is facing allegations that it bribed Libyan officials millions of dollars to secure government contracts. The Globe reported that Trudeau’s office wanted the company to avoid going to a trial and instead be fined, but be spared from admitting any criminal wrongdoing. The type of deal is called a “deferred prosecution agreement,” or a “remediation agreement,” which was only legalized in Canada last year.
Trudeau denied the allegations yesterday.
“The allegations in the Globe story this morning are false,” he said at a press conference in Vaughan. “Neither the current nor the previous attorney general was ever directed by me or by anyone in my office to take a decision in this matter.”
Pressed by reporters, he repeated that “the allegations reported in the story are false.”
In Trudeau’s absence from the House of Commons yesterday, Lametti faced a barrage of questions about the allegations, which he repeatedly denied.
“As the former Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada, I am bound by solicitor-client privilege in this matter,” Wilson-Raybould wrote in a statement on Friday.
“If the Prime Minister has nothing to hide as he has suggested, then he should have no reason to fear these individuals appearing before the justice committee,” Scheer said on Friday.
He said requesting that the officials appear at committee is his party’s next step because it can happen immediately, though they have also begun exploring other “legal avenues.”
Scheer suggested that if Liberal MPs on the committee rejected the proposed motion it would indicate a coverup, though these sort of motions by the opposition to launch an investigation or call a particular witness to committee are rarely passed.
Scheer also said he would support the suggestion by NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh to have the ethics commissioner investigate the allegations of political interference.
“At this point, everything is on the table,” Scheer said.
“If the Prime Minister truly believes there is no wrongdoing here, he should invite the ethics commissioner to investigate his office’s dealings with SNC-Lavalin and whether or not that was a factor in the removal of Ms. Wilson-Raybould from her position as attorney general,” Singh wrote in a statement on Friday.
In light of the accusations reported by the Globe, Singh also wants the ethics commissioner to investigate if Trudeau received any portion of the more than $100,000 in illegal donations that the Liberal Party was forced to return to SNC-Lavalin in 2016.
On Thursday, the Canadians Civil Liberties Association said it expects the allegations reported in the Globe to prompt a police investigation.
“I’d be surprised if a police investigation was not commenced,” CCLA executive director Michael Bryant told iPolitics. “A lot of police officers have laid a lot of obstruction of justice charges to a lot of ordinary Canadians, with a lot less evidence than this.”
The RCMP would only say it is aware of the allegations, not whether it’s considering opening an investigation or whether one has already been launched.
“The RCMP is aware of this matter but will not further comment at this point,” spokesperson Michelle Schmidt said.
The PMO and Lametti’s office say they haven’t contacted by the police, while Wilson-Raybould declined to comment.
Maxstar- Registered User
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Re: New MVA coming with Cabinet Shuffle
Wilson-Raybould entered federal politics hoping to be a bridge builder
The Canadian Press
Published: Feb 9. 2019
The Canadian Press
Published: Feb 9. 2019
OTTAWA — As the frigid air of an Ottawa winter howled outside in January 2013, Jody Wilson-Raybould stood at the centre of a mass of national media, trying to be a peacemaker as First Nations chiefs from across the country battled over how to secure a meeting with the sitting government on their terms.
Some wanted to reject a meeting with prime minister Stephen Harper, because they felt their talks should be directly with the crown, or its representative in Canada, Gov. Gen. David Johnston.
Wilson-Raybould was the British Columbia regional chief for the Assembly of First Nations, and she was going to build the bridge between the chiefs, and then between the chiefs and a government many felt was hostile to Indigenous issues.
When the meeting with Harper finally happened, she would later say, she realized change was going to be easier if she was on the inside. So she ran for the Liberals in the 2015 election and won in a downtown Vancouver riding.
Shortly afterward Prime Minister Justin Trudeau would name her Canada's justice minister.
Fast forward six years, and in the frigid air of another Ottawa January, Wilson-Raybould was grim as she faced the reality that three years after getting one of the highest portfolios in Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's cabinet, she was being demoted.
With the enthusiasm of a child being asked to apologize for stealing a cookie, she delivered the agreed-upon line, that moving from Justice to Veterans Affairs was not a negative, that there was "no world" in which serving Canada's veterans had a downside.
But the reality is she wasn't being moved because she was universally loved and doing a bang-up job.
She was being moved because she had become a thorn in the side of the cabinet, someone insiders say was difficult to get along with, known to berate fellow cabinet ministers openly at the table, and who others felt they had trouble trusting.
Less than a month later, Wilson-Raybould is at the centre of one of the biggest storms to hit the Trudeau government: allegations the prime minister or his aides pressured her to help Quebec corporate giant SNC-Lavalin avoid a criminal prosecution, and demoted her at least partly because she wouldn't co-operate.
Trudeau has flatly denied the allegations.
Several Liberals approached Friday said they were confident the story came from Wilson-Raybould herself.
"She's always sort of been in it for herself," said one insider who didn't want to be identified. "It's never been about the government or the cabinet. Everything is very Jodycentric."
The fear of reprisal for speaking about anything to do with the situation was running so high Friday most Liberals approached flatly refused.
Treasury Board President Jane Philpott, said to be one of Wilson-Raybould's closest friends and allies in cabinet, was not available. One former senior staffer said it was too uncomfortable to talk about.
Those who did spoke of a woman who went through staff at a breakneck pace (she has had four chiefs of staff in three-and-a-half years), and only showed up to meetings when she felt like it.
"I think I saw her at Indigenous caucus just once," said one Liberal.
But there is another view of her from outside government that is far more flattering, a description of a woman who is exceptionally smart and exceptionally driven.
Born into a political family, her father, Chief Bill Wilson, once told Pierre Trudeau, father of Justin, that his daughters were going to be prime ministers one day. Her relationship with her father is sometimes troubled, and one Indigenous source said it is "impossible to talk about Jody without talking about her dad."
Bill Wilson, who issued words of support for his daughter on social media this week, helped get Indigenous title to land and treaty rights enshrined in the Constitution.
Wilson-Raybould does leave a significant legacy as justice minister. She shepherded two of the biggest changes to Canadian social policy in a generation: physician-assisted dying and legalized marijuana.
"She's very serious, she's very credible," said Sheila North, former grand chief of the Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak, the northern Manitoba chiefs' organization.
She is bare-legs-in-minus-30-C-windchill tough — that's how she publicly accepted her new job outside Rideau Hall — a former B.C. Crown prosecutor who is assertive and knows her own mind. Any criticism of Wilson-Raybould for sticking up for her convictions, said North, is rooted in sexism.
"Someone who is very strong and assertive, when it's a male, it's not even considered anything that's negative," she said.
Mia Rabson, The Canadian Press
RevForce- Registered User
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Re: New MVA coming with Cabinet Shuffle
RevForce wrote:Wilson-Raybould entered federal politics hoping to be a bridge builder
The Canadian Press
Published: Feb 9. 2019
OTTAWA — As the frigid air of an Ottawa winter howled outside in January 2013, Jody Wilson-Raybould stood at the centre of a mass of national media, trying to be a peacemaker as First Nations chiefs from across the country battled over how to secure a meeting with the sitting government on their terms.
Some wanted to reject a meeting with prime minister Stephen Harper, because they felt their talks should be directly with the crown, or its representative in Canada, Gov. Gen. David Johnston.
Wilson-Raybould was the British Columbia regional chief for the Assembly of First Nations, and she was going to build the bridge between the chiefs, and then between the chiefs and a government many felt was hostile to Indigenous issues.
When the meeting with Harper finally happened, she would later say, she realized change was going to be easier if she was on the inside. So she ran for the Liberals in the 2015 election and won in a downtown Vancouver riding.
Shortly afterward Prime Minister Justin Trudeau would name her Canada's justice minister.
Fast forward six years, and in the frigid air of another Ottawa January, Wilson-Raybould was grim as she faced the reality that three years after getting one of the highest portfolios in Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's cabinet, she was being demoted.
With the enthusiasm of a child being asked to apologize for stealing a cookie, she delivered the agreed-upon line, that moving from Justice to Veterans Affairs was not a negative, that there was "no world" in which serving Canada's veterans had a downside.
But the reality is she wasn't being moved because she was universally loved and doing a bang-up job.
She was being moved because she had become a thorn in the side of the cabinet, someone insiders say was difficult to get along with, known to berate fellow cabinet ministers openly at the table, and who others felt they had trouble trusting.
Less than a month later, Wilson-Raybould is at the centre of one of the biggest storms to hit the Trudeau government: allegations the prime minister or his aides pressured her to help Quebec corporate giant SNC-Lavalin avoid a criminal prosecution, and demoted her at least partly because she wouldn't co-operate.
Trudeau has flatly denied the allegations.
Several Liberals approached Friday said they were confident the story came from Wilson-Raybould herself.
"She's always sort of been in it for herself," said one insider who didn't want to be identified. "It's never been about the government or the cabinet. Everything is very Jodycentric."
The fear of reprisal for speaking about anything to do with the situation was running so high Friday most Liberals approached flatly refused.
Treasury Board President Jane Philpott, said to be one of Wilson-Raybould's closest friends and allies in cabinet, was not available. One former senior staffer said it was too uncomfortable to talk about.
Those who did spoke of a woman who went through staff at a breakneck pace (she has had four chiefs of staff in three-and-a-half years), and only showed up to meetings when she felt like it.
"I think I saw her at Indigenous caucus just once," said one Liberal.
But there is another view of her from outside government that is far more flattering, a description of a woman who is exceptionally smart and exceptionally driven.
Born into a political family, her father, Chief Bill Wilson, once told Pierre Trudeau, father of Justin, that his daughters were going to be prime ministers one day. Her relationship with her father is sometimes troubled, and one Indigenous source said it is "impossible to talk about Jody without talking about her dad."
Bill Wilson, who issued words of support for his daughter on social media this week, helped get Indigenous title to land and treaty rights enshrined in the Constitution.
Wilson-Raybould does leave a significant legacy as justice minister. She shepherded two of the biggest changes to Canadian social policy in a generation: physician-assisted dying and legalized marijuana.
"She's very serious, she's very credible," said Sheila North, former grand chief of the Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak, the northern Manitoba chiefs' organization.
She is bare-legs-in-minus-30-C-windchill tough — that's how she publicly accepted her new job outside Rideau Hall — a former B.C. Crown prosecutor who is assertive and knows her own mind. Any criticism of Wilson-Raybould for sticking up for her convictions, said North, is rooted in sexism.
"Someone who is very strong and assertive, when it's a male, it's not even considered anything that's negative," she said.
Mia Rabson, The Canadian Press
Did Justin Trudeau’s Office Obstruct Justice in Canada’s Worst Corporate Corruption Scandal?
February 8, 2019
February 8, 2019
RevForce- Registered User
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Re: New MVA coming with Cabinet Shuffle
After reading that article, NOW I UNDERSTAND why she was turfed from the previous job. She is a real WOMAN. 100% flesh and blood woman.
That does not bid well for her in this libturd world nor it is 'good' for Veterans if turd hates her and what she does. But, I would rather have a real woman than an IT as he called that 'people-person' as ombudsman.
Lady, you got my thumbs up. Cannot wait for the election time.
That does not bid well for her in this libturd world nor it is 'good' for Veterans if turd hates her and what she does. But, I would rather have a real woman than an IT as he called that 'people-person' as ombudsman.
Lady, you got my thumbs up. Cannot wait for the election time.
vet1- Registered User
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Re: New MVA coming with Cabinet Shuffle
Liberals look to downplay SNC-Lavalin affair
Brian Lilley - February 9, 2019
Brian Lilley - February 9, 2019
Maybe Justin Trudeau simply experienced the discussions differently than Jody Wilson-Raybould.
That could be the prime minister’s next line of defence, after all, it worked for him with the Kokanee Grope.
There is no doubt there were conversations between Trudeau’s office and the former attorney general about going easy on construction and engineering firm SNC-Lavalin. The company is facing charges that it bribed Libyan officials to get government contracts there, a violation of Canadian law.
A conviction would mean a 10-year ban on the company being eligible to get federal contracts, a major part of its business and part of the reason the PMO was leaning on Wilson-Raybould to strike a deal.
The Globe and Mail cited senior government officials who confirmed people in the PMO had spoken to Wilson-Raybould about SNC-Lavalin though they described it as “a robust discussion” and even cited the damage that could be done to the company as justification for interfering.
New Veterans Affairs Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould addresses the media following a swearing in ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Monday, Jan. 14, 2019.
Yet worrying about the future of a company shouldn’t enter into the discussion at all, in fact there shouldn’t be a discussion when it comes to a criminal prosecution.
Justice in Canada shouldn’t come down to who you know in the PMO.
Yet the company, whose CEO has had 79 meetings to discuss “Justice and Law Enforcement” — meaning his case — with senior Trudeau government officials, may have come close to making a criminal case disappear in a manner we would expect to happen in a banana republic, or in China.
It shouldn’t matter how powerful the company is, justice is supposed to be blind. Each of us is supposed to get equal treatment before the law.
The Liberals were clearly weighing other factors.
I can understand being concerned about jobs but the optics of interfering politically in a corruption trial that is already about bribing government officials are awful.
Then consider that this is also a company that signed a compliance agreement with the Commissioner of Canada Elections over illegal donations made in this country. Between 2004 and 2011, a former executive organized a scheme to send $109,615.76 to the Liberals and $8,187.73 to the Conservatives.
Five charges on this matter were laid in May.
Former SNC-Lavalin CEO Pierre Duhaime leaves a courtroom in Montreal on Friday, February 1, 2019. Duhaime has pleaded guilty to a charge of helping a public servant commit breach of trust for his role in a bribe scandal around the construction of a $1.3-billion Montreal hospital.
In the midst of this, senior officials in the Liberal government were taking meetings to discuss the corruption case related to Libya.
At the same time, the Liberals were changing the law to make it so that SNC-Lavalin could have a soft landing.
Tucked away in the 2018 budget bill was a major change to the criminal code that would allow certain economic crimes — like bribery — to be dealt with through a remediation agreement.
“Under this regime, the prosecutor may negotiate a remediation agreement with an organization that is alleged to have committed an offence of an economic character,” the budget bill reads.
Certain charges can be set aside under this regime and, “the proceedings related to that offence are stayed if the organization complies with the terms of the agreement.”
Everything was set for SNC-Lavalin to find an easier path out of the prosecution they were facing, sign an agreement, pay a fine and keep getting government contracts.
There was only one problem, the then attorney general wouldn’t play ball.
Wilson-Raybould has since been shuffled out of the attorney general’s office and moved to Veterans Affairs.
In her place is David Lametti, a former law professor from Montreal. Will he be more inclined to give a pass to a favoured company, part of Quebec Inc?
Lametti is attempting to cast doubt on the entire controversy.
Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada David Lametti responds to a question during Question Period in the House of Commons Thursday, Feb. 7, 2019 in Ottawa.
“All we’ve heard are allegations in a newspaper,” Lametti said in an interview with CTV’s Question Period that was recorded on Friday and airs Sunday.
“The prime minister has said that these allegations are false. We haven’t had any corroborating evidence there. There hasn’t been anything to my mind that justifies a committee investigation.”
Canadians will have to decide whether having the government say nothing to see here, move along, is good enough.
I know my answer, not on your life.
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Re: New MVA coming with Cabinet Shuffle
Senior Trudeau government officials confirm discussion on SNC-Lavalin with AG, inquiry needed immediately
by Ali Taghva - February 9, 2019
by Ali Taghva - February 9, 2019
The recent SNC-Lavalin scandal in which the PMO has been alleged to have directed the former attorney general to drop a criminal investigation into a company with a long history of bribing government officials, as well as bypassing Canadian laws to donate over $100,000 to the Liberal party, has now gotten dead serious.
According to senior government officials who spoke to the Globe and Mail, “discussions were held with Jody Wilson-Raybould when she was justice minister and attorney-general on options in the case of SNC-Lavalin Group Inc., including shelving a corruption and fraud prosecution to help workers who could be affected if the company were convicted.”
On top of this, within days of the new Justice Minister being announced, the case against SNC-Lavalin has been dropped.
The Prime Minister has publicly denied that his office “directed” Wilson-Raybould, the former AG, but continues to dodge most reporters’ questions. Trudeau has also skipped out on question period during this time, while former AG Jody Wilson-Raybould has stuck to her client confidentiality and has refused to speak candidly to the public.
The lack of transparency to all Canadians has led both the NDP and Conservative party leaders to call for either an ethics investigation or an emergency meeting with the Parliamentary Justice Committee in order to question multiple members of the Liberal government.
On top of this, the father of former Attorney General has publicly called out the Trudeau government on Facebook, before doing an interview with Maclean’s noting that her daughter had been “kicked in the teeth”.
With such an intense scandal, one can’t help but recall the words of a younger and less political Trudeau, who once quipped, “It’s hard not to feel disappointed in your government when every day there is a new scandal.”
Now, it feels like that in Canada. In fact, it feels even worse than that.
In this moment, many Canadians have the genuine feeling that our government is covering up a scandal.
The fact that an Attorney General was “pressed” into potentially dropping a criminal investigation, and when she refused, she was fired. Soon after that, a new AG was approved within days of the case being dropped. If that isn’t worthy of interest, I don’t know what is.
With Canadians, the opposition, and the media asking questions, we have been left with nothing but a quick, dismissive response. There has been no proof and certainly no serious commitments to look into the matter.
This case is truly serious and underpins some of the most basic beliefs Canadians adhere to in our legal system as well as our political system. If the Prime Minister, his party, or his cabinet practice what they preach regarding transparency, then they should openly welcome a public investigation into this matter.
Nothing less will suffice for the Canadian people.
Comments below
Starman- Registered User
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Re: New MVA coming with Cabinet Shuffle
I hope the SNC story does not go away. It's high time Trudeau gets drilled in front of an inquiry! Trudeau has walked away from scandal for to long. Right before an election would look good on him. Trudeau has held everyone to account except himself. Raybould will play a long for so long but under oath I believe she will tell the truth and throw the PM under the bus.
We all know now why Raybould was taken out of justice and put into veterans affairs. Trudeau is protecting his votes by breaking once again ethical rules.
Fingers crossed this story continues getting to the bottom of all of this!
We all know now why Raybould was taken out of justice and put into veterans affairs. Trudeau is protecting his votes by breaking once again ethical rules.
Fingers crossed this story continues getting to the bottom of all of this!
LeiaRC5- Registered User
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Re: New MVA coming with Cabinet Shuffle
Scheer demands PM let Wilson-Raybould talk about SNC-Lavalin discussions
Veterans Affairs Minister Jodie Wilson-Raybould addresses the media following a swearing in ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Monday, Jan. 14, 2019. Wilson-Raybould is at the centre of one of the biggest storms the Trudeau government has been hit with to date: allegations he or his aides tried to pressure her to help Quebec-corporate giant SNC-Lavalin avoid a criminal prosecution. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld)
The Canadian Press
Published Sunday, February 10, 2019
OTTAWA - Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer is writing to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to ask that he waive solicitor-client privilege so former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould can publicly talk about what happened with SNC-Lavalin.
Scheer also wants all communications to or from the prime minister or members of his staff about the criminal prosecution of SNC-Lavalin to be opened up to public scrutiny.
The request follows a Globe and Mail report that members of Trudeau's office leaned on Wilson-Raybould to have federal prosecutors negotiate a "remediation agreement" with SNC-Lavalin rather than move ahead with a criminal prosecution.
The Quebec engineering and construction giant has faced legal trouble over allegations it paid millions of dollars in bribes to get government business in Libya, which would be a crime under Canadian law.
Wilson-Raybould, who was demoted from her role as justice minister and attorney general last month, has said she cannot comment because in her role as the government's top lawyer, she is bound by solicitor-client privilege.
Government officials have acknowledged Wilson-Raybould was involved in internal discussions about SNC-Lavalin, but they maintain there is nothing wrong with that and Trudeau has denied he or anyone in his office directed the minister on the matter.
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Re: New MVA coming with Cabinet Shuffle
CTV QP: 'Interview the people involved'
Feb 10, 2019
Feb 10, 2019
Garrison- Registered User
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Re: New MVA coming with Cabinet Shuffle
Lametti on SNC-Lavalin case: 'There has been no pressure'
Feb 10, 2019
Feb 10, 2019
Garrison- Registered User
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Re: New MVA coming with Cabinet Shuffle
CTV QP: Fife on SNC-Lavalin allegations
Feb 10, 2019
Feb 10, 2019
Garrison- Registered User
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Re: New MVA coming with Cabinet Shuffle
Does anyone else 'think' Wilson-Raybould is staying silent to knife Trudeau in the back like he did to her?
Like the saying states...."Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned" And Wilson-Raybould is definitely scorned!
Like the saying states...."Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned" And Wilson-Raybould is definitely scorned!
JAFO- Registered User
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Re: New MVA coming with Cabinet Shuffle
JAFO wrote:Does anyone else 'think' Wilson-Raybould is staying silent to knife Trudeau in the back like he did to her?
Like the saying states...."Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned" And Wilson-Raybould is definitely scorned!
Oh yes and Raybould has brains where Trudeau has little.
She would make a much better PM then Trudeau.
The way she has answered so far does not put Trudeau out of the woods with all of this.
LeiaRC5- Registered User
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Re: New MVA coming with Cabinet Shuffle
Excellent Question Period reporting especially the last video with Bob Fife of the Globe and Mail.
LeiaRC5- Registered User
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Re: New MVA coming with Cabinet Shuffle
February 10, 2019
The West Block, Episode 23, Season 8
By Staff Global News
The West Block, Episode 23, Season 8
By Staff Global News
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